Category Archives: Politics

Ken Starr redux

I was just reading that t California Supreme Court heard arguments on the constitutionality of Proposition 8 today. If you haven’t been following this, you’ll be surprised to know that Ken Starr is representing the pro-Prop 8 folks. I mean, you’d be surprised to know he isn’t living under a rock for the rest of his days after his role in the Clinton impeachment. How appropriate that the willing tool of the nutjob right in the 90s would continue in this role in the 00s. Outside of the moral issue of Prop 8 denying our gay fellow citizens the right to marry, it would be nice to see the crotchety old fascist lose a high profile wingnut lawsuit. Maybe then he’d get the picture but, like most of the obsolete-and-quickly-going-extinct Republicans, he still hasn’t figured out that nobody likes him, and doesn’t want him participating in politics anymore. In fact, why doesn’t somebody just do the country a favor and pop a cap in his ass, already? Jeez.... Read More »

The election and everything, pt. 1: Proposition H8 and the Mormons

Well, I purposely avoided blogging right after election day, mostly because I wanted it to sink in for a while before I posted something. I’ll be straight up honest with you: I find myself more saddened by the passage of Proposition 8 in California than I find myself elated by Obama’s win. I know that might seem odd to some, and my sadness should, in no way, be a reflection of any lack of enthusiasm I have for President-elect Obama. I just felt really strongly about defeating Proposition 8, and in fact, it was the only political campaign I gave money to (I gave $50.00). Why would I, a straight, married, father of two in Colorado, give a shit about the legal status of gay marriage in California? Well, it’s pretty simple: I believe that discrimination against people because of their sexual orientation is wrong. Writing it into the California state constitution, of all places, strikes me as a great moral failure. The fact that the “Yes On Prop 8” campaign was massively funded by the Mormons, of all people, disgusts me. I’ll come right out and say it. I hate Mormonism. I think it is a false religion, a cult of the worse kind. I do not hate individual Mormons. I feel pity for them, mostly — because they are brainwashed. I am also not saying that they should not be able to practice their religion; I am a firm believer in freedom of religion. However, I will say that I disagree with their faith and the practice thereof, and that I would like to see the Mormon Church lose their tax-exempt status. The really sickening thing about the Mormon Church underwriting Prop H8, I mean, besides their own extremely fucked-up views and history with marriage to begin with, is that, in my opinion, it didn’t really have anything to do with California residents. I think the Mormon Church would not give two shits if the gays were marrying each other in California, if they could be ensured that Utah would never be forced to recognize gay marriage. But, as they say, “As California Goes, So Goes The Nation”. They (correctly) viewed legal gay marriage as a threat to their theocracy in Utah. Yes, I said theocracy. Anyone who doesn’t believe that the Mormon Church controls the state of Utah lock, stock and barrel is delusional. They see Utah as the “holy land”, and California’s legalization of gay marriage would eventually force Utah to recognize it as well, and given the importance they place on marriage in the Mormon religion, that was just too scary a thought to contemplate. Non-Mormons probably don’t understand how important marriage is in the Mormon religion, but really, in many ways, it is the absolute centerpiece of their spiritual beliefs. When a Mormon couple are “bound together in the temple”, it’s for this life and the next. Mormons believe that when they die, they’ll be given a planet to rule over, and their earthly wife will be “First Wife” in the afterlife (I’m pretty sure plural marriage is accepted in the Mormon afterlife). The whole religion is extremely patriarchal, and the marriage contract puts the man firmly in charge. Now, given that one can be excommunicated from the Mormon Church for being openly gay, why would the Mormons give a shit about non-Mormons marrying each other? Again, it’s because Utah is a theocracy, and if (when) the state is forced to recognize the social contract of gay marriage, it will be seen by the powers that be in that state as an abomination; a defacement of the temple, so to speak. Most people think Utah is just one of 50 states, but really, while they pledge fealty to the United States and the federal government in Washington DC, a Mormon’s first allegiance is not to the US, but to the Mormon Church. If Utah were it’s own fucked-up little country — hey more power to ‘em. But they’re not — they’re part of the United States, and subject to our laws and constitution. The fact that they are meddling in the business of neighboring states to protect their religious beliefs is disgusting, especially when the net effect is to enshrine discrimination into the state constitution. There are three lawsuits proceeding: According to New York Law School Professor Arthur S. Leonard, All three suits proceed on essentially the same theory - that because the amendment alters the fundamental equal protection rights guaranteed by the state constitution, as they were identified by the Court last spring in the Marriage cases, it constitutes a “revision” of the constitution rather than a simple amendment. Under the California Constitution, a voter initiative can lead to a simple amendment, but not to a revision. In order for the initiative to revise the constitution, supermajorities of the legislature must propose it to the people for enactment. The idea behind this is that there should be a broad political consensus in the state before revising the fundamental charter of government, not merely a simple majority vote of the electorate as a result of a measure placed on the ballot through the petitioning process. Let’s hope our gay brothers & sisters in California find some relief with these petitions. And to the Mormon Church, and it’s believers I say: you are welcome to practice your religion as you so see fit, but when the free practice of your religion becomes a threat to what I believe is a fundamental right for all Americans, that’s when we must say there are limits to how you will be allowed to protect your theocracy. That’s the bottom line: the Mormon Church’s opposition to gay marriage in one of the US’s most liberal states has nothing to do with “protecting marriage”, and everything to do with preserving their right to run Utah as a semi-theocratic state. I doubt it will happen, but I would love to see the Mormon Church lose their tax-exempt status over this shit.... Read More »

Executive Experience Fail

Read More »

Another bizarro politically-themed painting

This one involving Ron Paul:... Read More »

Like Hope, But Different

Read More »

Yes We Can

I’m caucusing for Barack Obama on Tuesday. I’m going to allow myself to hope that this man can bring the change this country so desperately needs. I’m doing this for my kids’ future. My mind is made up. Watch this video, and you might make your mind up, too. I feel cheesy for even writing this, but man - this video struck a chord.... Read More »

Proposed Republican Party bumper sticker for 2008

“Vote Republican. You can wreck a country in 8 years, but it takes 12 years to kill it” (Hat tip to Sadly, No!)... Read More »

The Story Of Stuff

The Story Of Stuff Nothing really ground-breaking here if you’ve been following this sort of thing for a while, but the presentation packs a punch in it’s succinctness. As with any distillations, some things are kinda brushed over, for instance, the part about the computer’s motherboard only needing to have it’s chip replaced when the rest of it is just fine is a gross oversimplification. It ignores all the supporting technologies needed to realize the speed gains of that newer chip. Also, she might like that she’s still using that ole cathode-ray tube monitor but the fact is, LCDs consume way less power and are healthier for one to use than the old CRTs. Those things aside, she makes a good point. We have a linear production-to-consumption process on a planet with finite resources and an ever-increasing demand for consumer goods. It’s not sustainable. Personally, rather than throw out those old shoes, broken lamps, broken monitors, old computers and crap into a landfill, I’ve been taking them to CHARM, and while it’s not exactly cheap, it’s way of voluntarily reclaiming the externalization of the price of those things. Also, when I was growing up I learned to never take anything for granted, and never throw out something useful. I’ve still got an 9-year-old Dell XPS T600+ workstation, running Ubuntu Linux. Despite the fact that it tends to hang when the room temperature gets too high, or when it’s asked to perform a particularly CPU-heavy compile, it still gets the job done. I am a huge advocate of squeezing every last bit of life out of a computer as possible. Before we got the T600+ in 01 (it was originally my work computer when I worked at Active.com, purchased in 99), we were using Missy’s old computer, which she got from her dad, and he had purchased it in 1993, I believe. I had replaced the motherboard and put in an AMD K6+ of course, but the PSU, case, etc. were still all the same.... Read More »

How Bush Intends To Keep Us In Iraq After He's Gone

http://www.boston.com/news/nation/articles/2008/01/25/bushplanforiraqwouldbea_first/ “President Bush’s plan to forge a long-term agreement with the Iraqi government that could commit the US military to defending Iraq’s security would be the first time such a sweeping mutual defense compact has been enacted without congressional approval, according to legal specialists. … At a House hearing on the pact on Wednesday, Representative Dana Rohrabacher, Republican of California and a former Reagan administration official, accused the Bush administration of “arrogance” for not consulting with Congress about the pact. If it includes any guarantees to Iraq, he said, Congress must sign off. “We are here to fulfill the constitutional role established by the founding fathers,” Rohrabacher said, adding, “It is not all in the hands of the president and his appointees. We play a major role.” … “A commitment that the United States will act to assist Iraq, potentially through the use of our armed forces in the event of an attack on Iraq, could effectively commit the nation to engage in hostilities,” Biden wrote. “Such a commitment cannot be made by the executive branch alone under our Constitution.”“ It’s just one thing after another with these guys. It’s not enough to do all the damage they can in the 8 years they hold office. They’re gonna try to force their insane policies on the next (likely Democratic) administration as well. Ultimately it will go to the courts, and how it ultimately winds up will depend on whether Justice Kennedy sides with the Roberts/Alito/Scalia/Thomas unitary executive theorists or with the Souter/Ginsburg/Stevens/Breyer separation of powers adherents. Hopefully by the time that the Supreme Court hears this case, Clinton or Obama will be in office and the current unitary executive proponents will be having second thoughts about advancing that power to a Democratic administration.... Read More »

Missing White House emails

There’s this article in Time Magazine entitled “Where Are The White House Emails?” The answer is pretty obvious. They were intentionally destroyed. They were destroyed because they contained information that’s either damaging or embarrassing to the White House. This should be plainly obvious to everyone. For all that talk back in the 90s from the Republicans about the “missing Rose Law Firm billing records”, their silence on this issue is deafening. I am so sick of being outraged by this administration. It’s just one thing after another. “Ignore it” some might say. If my children’s future wasn’t being so damaged by the decisions that are being made there, maybe I could - but all I see is the most evil, corrupt and incompetent administration in American history. It’s difficult for me to see how people can still justify their votes for Bush.... Read More »

What are readers of Conservapedia interested in most?

So there’s this “conservative” version of Wikipedia called Conservapedia, which describes itself thusly: Tired of the LIBERAL BIAS every time you search on Google and a Wikipedia page appears? Conservapedia began in November 2006, as the class project for a World History class, meeting in New Jersey, of 58 advanced homeschooled and college-bound students. So, it’s a Wikipedia for conservatives, right? Take a look at the top 10 “most-viewed pages”: http://www.conservapedia.com/Special:Statistics <Nelson>HA-ha</Nelson> Wee bit obsessed are we? (H/T to Atrios) P.S. Just in case they decide to modify this page so it’s a wee less, umm, insightful vis a vis the conservative mindset, here’s a screen capture, preserved for posterity.... Read More »

Quote of the day

From Digby, of course: “You know, freedom, which in the cramped and self-centered right wing view is defined as your inviolate freedom to use guns, discriminate, pollute, and exploit. Any other kind of freedom, not so much.” Exactly.... Read More »

Dear Christian Right, et al.

Just for the record, I fully support your possible decision to support a third-party candidate should Rudy Giuliani get the nomination. In fact, I will fully support your decision to abandon the Republican Party en masse and form your own, explicitly fundamentalist Christian, explicitly right-wing third party, should you decided to go that far. I think it’s way past time for this bold action, and I encourage you to make double-time on it.... Read More »

RIP Steve Gilliard

Steve Gilliard passed away this morning. He was all of 41. It was about a year ago that I subscribed to Gilliard’s blog. I was drawn to his writing the same way I was drawn to folks like Digby — he was fiercely honest, amazingly brave and wasn’t afraid to toss in a “motherfucker” into his writing where appropriate. He pegged this administration for the craven cowards that they are long before it was fashionable, and seemed to be a person of great integrity. At the very least, he was a writer who could distill things down into their base elements and present them for what they were without a bunch of extraneous bullshit. I had been following Jen’s posts for the last few months after Steve collapsed and was put into the hospital, and when Jen announced a couple weeks ago that Steve’s family has asked her to not post any more updates, I felt a sinking feeling in my gut that his condition had taken a turn for the worst. Steve was one of my favorite writers in the blogosphere, and I had been looking forward to his return. I am stunned and greatly saddened to read of his death. He will definitely be missed.... Read More »

Mission Accomplished: The Fourth Anniversary of Dumb

Dumb as in (as Atrios would say): “TEH STUPID! IT BURNS!” Media Matters has a nice roundup of the amazingly dumb things major media figures were saying and writing about that day. I’m sure you’ll find favorite moments in pundit stupidity on your own, but my favorites were definitely Chris Matthews & G. Gordon Liddy going on and on about Bush’s manhood and crotch bulge. Of course, it was a noteworthy enough event that day that I even blogged about it here. At the time, I said it was “textbook, Chinese-style propaganda”. I think that assessment holds up pretty well. (H/T to Atrios for the link)... Read More »

Why stupid pride will be the downfall of this country

Stephen of the Thinkery pretty much hits the nail on the head here: “Millions of people have been duped by the modern GOP, and instead of rising up to hold them accountable, they now actively participate in deceiving themselves. They intentionally choose to believe the talking points distributed through the rightwing media, because it would damage their God damned pride to face the truth. And long after George Bush and Karl Rove are merely unhappy memories, this nation will still be stuck with those who would rather use a lie to soothe their troubled psyche than act like grownups and face the truth.” Man, this statement is so true. Instapundit’s whole raison d’ etre these days is to find whatever little scrap he can grab and cling onto to avoid coming to the terms that he was about as wrong as you get on the most important foreign policy issue of our generation. It’s hard to overstate how much trouble this ill-begotten war has gotten our country into, yet millions of people won’t accept that simple truth that’s right before their eyes, because damnit, they’d have to admit they were fucking wrong. I’ve seen members of my family, people whom I love and respect on most things, twist themselves into the most absurd knots, because they simply don’t want to admit that everything about this war was a huge fucking mistake, because to admit a mistake is to admit weakness, and they can never never do that. It’s amazing to me how many people share the same mindset that Bush does in that regard. One really has to wonder what it’s going to take for them to figure it out.... Read More »

Revisiting The Democrat's "Weak Start"

Back on November 15th of last year, just a little over a week after the Democrats took back control of Congress, Glenn “Instapundit” Reynolds opined: Meanwhile, Betsy’s Page looks at Murtha’s candidacy for Majority Leader and thinks Pelosi has gotten herself in a box…The New Republic is criticizing Pelosi’s effort to put the impeached-for-corruption Alcee Hastings in as Chair of the Intelligence Committee…So far I’d say the Dems are off to a weak start. I responded to Glenn’s foolish, rantish link frenzy with my own post, pointing out the obvious. I mean, it was lunacy to suggest the “Dems were off to a weak start” when they hadn’t even taken office yet. Of course, now it’s January 24th, and the Dems have been in office for a couple weeks. Glenn spends most of time bitching about Jimmy Carter, and linking to fatass blowhards who think Jim Webb gave a shit response to last night’s SOTU. He’s also calling it “political suicide” for Republican senators to oppose Bush’s escalation (Glenn might be a very nice guy, but politically, he’s a fucking idiot. Suicide, Glenn? Suicide is any politician continuing to support this war. Of course, Glenn’s been pushing this disaster of a war since the beginning. Fact is, he’s married to this war, and he’ll say or write anything to avoid coming to terms that not only was he on the wrong side of the greatest strategic mistake this country has ever made, he was the chief cheerleader in the so-called blogosphere for it. There’s blood on his hands, and he knows it.). At any rate, I was pleasantly surprised to read about the “real start” the Dems are off to, this time from the Evans-Novak political report (which is decidedly Republican-leaning): “The ‘hundred hours’ program of House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) has been a success beyond all anticipation. The passage of poll-approved measures came with a unanimous Democratic vote and heavy — in some cases majority — Republican support. This performance shows the error and futility of Republican expectations that Pelosi as speaker would fall on her face, though they still hope that she will fail now that the set pieces of the ‘hundred hours’ have been completed… “Meanwhile, Republicans are divided and disorganized. Senior Republicans in Congress refer to President George W. Bush and his staff as irrelevant and out of touch. Younger conservative members are going their own way, feeling that neither the White House nor the party’s congressional leadership shows the way for the GOP. Republican House aides, even in the leadership, complain that they are so completely shut out of the legislative process they have no idea what will be on the House floor next week.” Weak start indeed. Glenn Reynolds - grotesquely wrong on the war, the Dems’ start and just about everything else. Shit, even his technology posts, usually the one tolerable thing I can read on his blog anymore, have gone bat-shit insane. The fact is, the right’s ascendancy in this country is over, ground to a stop by the sheer incompetence and idiocy of unchecked Republican power. Honestly, I’m glad Glenn and his ilk continue to live in their bubble where opposing the surge is “political suicide” for anyone. The public has turned massively against the war, and Glenn & Hugh Hewitt are threatening Republican senators not to vote against escalation. You know, if I didn’t know better, I’d say that Glenn & Hugh are actually deep Democratic plants, designed with the intention of making the coming 2008 blowout even more massive. Of course, I do know better, and I know that these warmongers are fucking crazy, and growing even more so the more their fortunes continue to sink. It’d be fun to watch if so many hadn’t lost their lives due to these evil fucks.... Read More »

Wingnut Josh Trevino's response to Bush's Speech: Build Concentration Camps!

This is really unbelievably awful. Redstate.com co-founder Josh Trevino says the way we can win in Iraq is by dragging off all the Iraqi women and children to fucking concentration camps and laying waste to the rest of the country. I’m not kidding: Make no mistake: those means were cruel. I have stated previously that I endorse cruel things in war - to eschew them is folly. The British achieved victory over the Boers by taking their women and children away to concentration camps, by laying waste to the countryside, and by dotting the veld with small garrisons in blockhouses at regular intervals. The men who remained were hindered in their movements by the wire stretching from blockhouse to blockhouse (a phenomenon that the Morice Line experience has shown would be massively more effective now); they could either surrender or die. Absent women and children, the rules of engagement were lax. From implementation to victory took under 18 months. To accomplish this required over one-quarter million soldiers. Consider the Boer-era strategy for victory as it might apply in Iraq. Consider it because in doing so, one considers the course of action that arguably maximizes efficacy per soldier, thereby yielding a plausible figure for needed soldiery. Let me ask you this Josh — concentration camps, laying waste to the country, making the “rules of engagement” even more “lax” — what the fuck are you talking about? Are you out of your fucking mind? We’re supposedly fighting this war to create a free and democratic society in Iraq. Hey, I might not fucking believe it, but that’s Bush’s rationale and he’s sticking to it. For people who get awfully sensitive when someone compares our loss of civil liberties to Nazi-era German fascism, some elements of the right certainly let their awful little imaginations get away from themselves when daydreaming about how to win an unwinnable war.... Read More »

Which One Is It, Karl?

No shit.... Read More »

The Age of Horrorism

There’s a lot to agree and disagree with in the essay “The Age of Horrorism” by author Martin Amis that appeared in the Observer last week. His contention that Western liberalism is in denial about the “Islamacist cult of death” is a bit hard to swallow, especially his complete discounting of the horrible economic and social conditions many of the Jihadists grow up in being a factor. He tends to place the blame completely on the Imperial ambitions of Islam, dreams of the caliphate, etc. However, when he takes aim at the crippling effect of sexism in Islam - “The connection between manifest failure and the suppression of women is unignorable.”, and his rationale that the United States “walked into a trap” when it invaded Iraq - his essay soars. One of the most eloquent things I’ve read about terrorism in a long time, even if I disagree with much of what he has to say. Definitely worth the 30-40 minutes you’ll spend plowing through it. Part One Part Two Part Three... Read More »

Jesus would be proud.

Georgia Tech ends gay hate-speech ban Following a lawsuit brought by social conservatives, Georgia Tech University agreed this week to remove parts of a speech code prohibiting students in on-campus housing from verbally injuring gay and lesbian classmates, among others. A U.S. District Court judge ordered the school to abide by the decision, which it made after being sued, with the help of a Christian law firm, by two students who claimed their right to free speech was being undermined by the code, the Atlanta Journal-Constitution reports. I’m sure Jesus would be proud that litigators in a self-described “Christian” law firm are standing up for Georgia Tech students’ right to scream “Faggot” and “Dyke” at their classmates.... Read More »

Putting the war on terrah in perspective

I once asked the Perfesser in a private email why, for someone who claims to be non-partisan, he never had anything nice to say about Democrats. His response? “Democrats are suicidally insane”. I think what he meant by that was that the Democrats weren’t taking a cower-in-fear position about this “new” global threat that terrah presented and because of that, Democrats are suicidal. I don’t know about anyone else, but a life lived in fear of terrah is not a life I consider worth living. In case this fact isn’t prima facie, Kung-Fu Monkey lays it out in common-sense terms that anyone can understand: Osama Bin Laden got everything on his Christmas list after 9/11 — US out of Saudi Arabia; the greatest military in the world over-extended, pinned down and distracted; the greatest proponent of democracy suddenly alienated from its allies; a US culture verily eager to destroy freedoms that little scumfuck could never even dream to touch himself — I would like to deny him the last little check on the clipboard, i.e. constant terror. I panic, they win. To coin a phrase, Osama Bin Laden can suck my insouciance. Read the whole thing.... Read More »

Just when you think the wingnuts can't get any kookier...

Yes, that figure wielding the sword is Rush Limbaugh. The three heads on the monster are Al Gore, Bill & Hillary Clinton. The scantily-clad women are supposed to be "Lady Liberty" and "Miss Justice". Jeez.... Read More »

Conservative Blog Taxonomy

It’s funny cause it’s true. An especially good reaming is given to Jeff Jarvis who is described as a “man with a face for radio”. No doubt. When did ugly trolls who used to write for TV Guide suddenly become credible political commentators?... Read More »

Pathetic Glenn Reynolds

Having been unable to find any posts on mainstream lefty blogs dissing Sunday’s turnout in the Iraqi election, Glenn is reduced to complaining about Democratic Underground posts (a fringe BBS representing the most extreme views of the left, and a likely stalking ground for agent provocateurs), and about headlines not being positive enough. He just can’t help himself. I guess when a law professor’s claim to fame isn’t that he’s a widely-respected academic known for his profound insights and contributions to the teaching of jurisprudence (like say, Lawrence Lessig), but is instead known for his highly trafficked and self-servingly controversial web site (where he very rarely pontificates on issues of law anymore), it’s going to lead to pathetic, attention-craving behavior. Perfesser Reynolds used to have some thoughtful things to say. He seems to have lost his mind since 9/11 though — an affliction that has unfortunately affected a lot of people. BTW, Glenn — please quit emailing me about your car. Really, I assure you, I’m not jealous of your cool car and you don’t have to keep bragging to me about it. OK?... Read More »

Bush Calls For More Testing & Less Learning

Today, George Bush called for more testing of high school students. Essentially, it’s part of his “new” education agenda, which can be summarized as “more of the same bullshit that isn’t working”. The puppets that pull Bush’s strings seem to be focused like a laserbeam on standardized testing. I’ll concur with the statement that it’s important to test kids, but what has happened with NCLB is that teachers spend a lot more time training kids to take standardized tests, and a lot less time actually teaching the kids. Supporters of NCLB will often make the argument that “failing schools” and “failing teachers” should be punished face consequences for failure to improve academic performance. Unfortunately, the law’s requirements are gamed to essentially make it impossible for many schools to improve. For instance, Littleton Public Schools, which has a less than 1% dropout rate, 15 National Merit Scholars in 2003 and 92% of it’s graduates going to college, failed the Adequate Yearly Progress standard in 2003. A couple years in this category and they’ll be pegged as a failing school district. Since NCLB makes no provisions to evaluate school performance on any other criteria EXCEPT standardized test performance, LPS’ response is basically to stop teaching kids and start training them to take standardized tests. For a program thats wildy unpopular with most Democrats (partially because it’s unfunded) and some Republicans (because it takes away local control), you have to wonder how far any extension of NCLB is going to go. My guess is that the gutless Republicans in Congress will get right back on their knees and do whatever Bush wants, because in the end, Bush’s Cult of Personality is more important than good public policy. Let’s remember that NCLB is modeled on a fraud, Rod Paige’s Texas Miracle: A miracle? “A fantasy land,” said Dr. Kimball. “They want the data to look wonderful and exciting. They don’t tell you how to do it; they just say, ‘Do it.’ ” In February, with the help of Dr. Kimball, the local television station KHOU broke the news that Sharpstown High had falsified its dropout data. That led to a state audit of 16 Houston schools, which found that of 5,500 teenagers surveyed who had left school, 3,000 should have been counted as dropouts but were not. Last week, the state appointed a monitor to oversee the district’s data collection and downgraded 14 audited schools to the state’s lowest rating. This would be the same Rod Paige who called the NEA, the largest teacher’s union in the country, a terrorist organization. I have to admit to having a dog in this fight: my wife is a first-year high-school science teacher. Despite the fact that she has a bachelor’s degree in biology and a masters in secondary science education (she graduated with a 4.0), and that science teachers, particularly science teachers, particularly WOMEN science teachers are in short supply in this country, she makes a paltry $30,000/year, which is how much money we took out in student loans to fund her master’s degree. She works 10-12 hour days and is incredibly dedicated. When I hear conservatives blather on and on about the “education monopoly” and how public schools “indoctrinate kids with the power and glory of the almighty state”, and how all those lazy, lazy teachers are finally facing some accountability, it makes me want to puke. I know there are lazy teachers out there, who just collect a paycheck and don’t give a fuck. Most teachers I have known in my life, however, are very hard-working people who believe in what they do. The phrase “education monopoly” would seem to imply that public school teachers are hoarding profit somehow, but given the sorry state of educational funding in this country, it’s a monopoly of hard work and long hours, not finances. Of course, if my wife had wanted to make money, she wouldn’t be a public school teacher — but she chose the teaching profession because she loves science, she loves kids, and she wants to share that passion with kids. Instead, she’s spending a good chunk of her time training them how to take tests, which isn’t really learning. Anyone who has studied for their SAT or ACT knows that a big part of the key to success with standardized tests is knowing how to take a standardized test, not necessarily your knowledge of the subjects at hand. Finally, if you thought irony was dead, then you need look no further than Bush’s statement today: “We’re not interested in mediocrity”. Strong words from a C student and a legacy admissions entrant to Yale & Harvard.... Read More »

More Proof Glenn Reynolds Is A Classless Prick

“Hey, look how rich I am! I took this picture of my expensive car with my expensive camera! I love to brag about my expensive toys!”... Read More »

Bush to spend more on inauguration than on helping the tsunami victims

“Stingy”: “Link:The Bush administration yesterday pledged $15 million to Asian nations hit by a tsunami that has killed more than 22,500 people, although the United Nations’ humanitarian-aid chief called the donation ‘stingy.’ Context, context…The war on terror will take center stage at next month’s second inauguration for President Bush in Washington, D.C. …The estimated budget for the event is $30-40 million, but that will not cover security costs. “ (Via Eschaton.) UPDATE (01/01/05): The US has upped it’s offer from the initial amount of $15 million to $350 million (and Powell says it could go into the billions). Did this occur because US officials grossly misunderestimated the extent of the tragedy or because they were shamed into it? We’ll never know, but either way, it’s a failure of leadership.... Read More »

Mandate, schmandate, part two

From What Mandate: A Report on the Joint National Post-Election Survey: A majority of voters backed the president, but they still thought the country was off track and preferred a different direction in America’s relations with the world and on domestic social policy…[T]he public’s priorities are wholly different than those the president put forth in the days after the election. That is particularly clear if one looks at fiscal and tax policies, health care, and Social Security privatization. (Via DonkeyRising.)... Read More »

November 2, 2004 wasn't *all* bad for the Democrats, at least in Colorado...

Democrats May Use Results in Colorado as Political Primer (washingtonpost.com): “‘The notion that moral issues won the 2004 election was disproven in Colorado,’ Gates continued. ‘We offered solutions, not ideology, and won almost everything.’” I took a lot of comfort in the fact that, despite being utterly bummed that Kerry lost the election to an incompetent, evil, arrogant fool on November 2nd, Democrats in Colorado pretty much cleaned up. If we produce some results over the next few years, I’ll predict that my beloved home state will go blue in 2008.... Read More »

Die Bold With A Vengeance

Great gallery of fake n’ funny (cause it’s true!) Diebold ads.... Read More »

Mandate, schmandate...

Bush voters: think your man has a mandate? Think again….... Read More »

I can't decide which is more depressing...

Realizing that I actually fell into a bona-fide depressive funk over Bush getting elected, or actually being in the bona-fide depressive funk because Bush got elected. Not that one exists in a vacuum of course; the recent deaths of my uncle Don and my wife’s grandfather were some of the heaviest things I’d dealt with in a long time — but Bush’s reelection seemed to be the equivalent of coming home from a long hard day at work and finding that the dog shit all over the carpet. The last thing one wants to do when one is tired, down and exhausted is clean up dog shit — or realize that Bush is gonna be with us for the next four years.... Read More »

The obligatory George Bush post

So, like many of my friends, I feel a great deal of sadness and deflation that George Bush was elected to four more years. I’ve read a lot of commentary on the subject, and feel no need to reinvent the wheel. However, I will say one thing…. I read a while back that “A vote for Bush is a character flaw”. I agree. While alot of people who voted for Bush are undoubtedly good people in their hearts, all the Bush voters I personally know have one thing in common: they’re all pretty much assholes of one kind or another (and to one degree or another), and they all have a personal taste for power. I guess in that regard it’s not suprising they voted for Bush — he appeals to their inner asshole. If you happen to be reading this and consider yourself to be one of the people I’m talking about, well, I’m sorry, but it’s the damn truth. Console yourself with the fact that your asshole will wield unprecedented power for the next 4 years.... Read More »

Overheard on Rush today...

"I think that if the people answering these pollster's questions were just to come out and tell the truth, it would be a disaster for the Democrat party". OK, Rush. Been bustin' any 40-ought Oh-Cees lately, big guy?... Read More »

Digby is on a roll...

One of my favorite blogs without an RSS feed, Digby is all over the moral observations of recent events in the Iraq tragedy. Today he writes: I'm once again struck by the moral surety of these religious Republicans who don't seem to be upset by the deviant behavior graphically shown in these pictures and who don't seem worried in the least about how they are going to explain it to their children. It seems like only yesterday that every other word from their mouths was "deplorable," "reprehensible," "despicable," "disgusting," and " "revolting," as they relayed their shock and horror at the stunning news of a 50 year old man having an affair with a young woman in his office. If I recall correctly, this was considered to be an act of such depravity that they didn't know how the nation could survive if the perpetrator wasn't removed from office. Amazing stuff here, folks. This follows up an astute observation about what story the pictures are telling us here: Bush and his band of faux moralists were in part chosen by the Republican establishment precisely because of their reputations for sexual rectitude. They knew they could get away with almost anything as long as they didn't expose themselves to accusations of sex -- of any kind. (The closest they came to slipping was Bush's Top Gun flight of fancy, but that faded soon enough.) The press and the public are attuned to the tiniest hint of sexual impropriety, both loving it and pretending to be shocked by it, and the GOP knows this because they virtually created the environment of sexual hypocricy our culture slavishly embraces. I concur.... Read More »

Life in Uzbekistan

"Now women burn themselves when they can't see any escape from the violence in their families. Deprivations, humiliations and poverty pile up, and our young women lose themselves." A sad commentary on life for some women in noted "Coalition of the Willing" member, Uzbekistan. Credit where credit is due: "U.S. troops stationed at the Khanabad air base in southern Uzbekistan quietly send weekly food donations to the shelter." [via Matthew Yglesias]... Read More »

Rules for being a Republican

"Your party's not doing so well, is it?"... Read More »

Enter the Matrix.

"Combining state records with databases owned by Seisint Inc., Matrix details -- among other things -- the property, boats and Internet domains people own, their address history, utility connections, bankruptcies, liens and business filings, according to an August report by the Georgia state Office of Homeland Security." ``With minimal input and the push of a button, witnesses, associates, relatives and suspects can be identified and located,'' adds the report, which was cited in a December Supreme Court filing by the Electronic Privacy Information Center." posted without comment.... Read More »

Nixon Vs. Bush

Allen at The Right Christians writes: Bush represents all that Nixon struggled against. Where Nixon was always articulate when discussing even the most complex foreign or domestic issues, Bush ventures into uncharted territory when he dares to use words of more than two syllables. Where Nixon's every mistake threatened to cast him into outer darkness, Bush has failed over and over again in life only to be rescued by his powerful family and its friends. Where Nixon learned about the hardships of life in the pre-New Deal capitalist America, Bush has always enjoyed the advantages bestowed upon the born-rich. Read the whole thing. Almost makes you feel sorry for Tricky Dick. Almost.... Read More »

Spend-and-borrow Republicans

Democrats defend what they can't pay for, and Republicans boldly offer to accept the consequences of their convictions. Their supporters huzzah for their principles. Nobody has to deliver. It's an ideal situation for elections, when the big media pay attention again. Republicans will run as the party of tax cuts, Democrats as defenders of schools and hospitals. Everything will run except California's government, and every principle will be upheld except the one of paying for your decisions. Read the entire article.... Read More »

Lest we forget...

Joshua over at View From A Height lovingly displays a picture of Saddam & Chirac meeting in 1974 and titles his post 'We'll always have Paris'. I'll see your pre-murdering, pre-torturing Saddam and raise with a photo of our own Don Rumsfeld meeting with the murdering, torturing Saddam below: Update: Video is also available... Read More »

So much for the Saddam Capture Stock Market Bounce

Screen capture of DrudgeReport, 2:10pm MST: The final damage? DJIA down 19.34 points, Nasdaq down 30.74 points, S&P500 down 6.10 points. My guess is that the gains for Bush's popularity jump will be about as fleeting. Oh yeah, the dollar fell to new lows today against the Euro, and oil prices rose. Money talks, and bullshit walks.... Read More »

Tweaking NRO

NRO, for the ignorant, is National Review Online, a right-wing movement rag started by William F. Buckley, someone I have some respect for (even if I don't agree with many of his ideas), but has, for the last few years, basically become a Republican National Committee fax-rewriting service. At any rate, they have a blog called "The Corner", which I read a few times a week, mostly just to marvel at what passes for "serious" conservative thought these days. What have I been marvelling at? Well, there's Jonah Goldberg, demon-offspring of Lucianne Goldberg, Linda Tripp's advisor. Goldberg seems to have launched into the conservative-opinionatin' bidness solely on this connection; he has no long-term involvement with the conservative press, but is more pleasant on the eyes than his hideous mother, which is most likely why he gets face time on CNN. Anyway, Goldberg recently spent a few weeks researching and writing about why he hates Vermont so much. I'm not kidding. Another columnist there, John Derbyshire, once called for Chelsea Clinton to be sterilized to keep the Clintons from perpetuating their genes. Again, I'm not kidding. Why do I read NRO? Well, I find them amusing for one. I'm also one of those "know thine enemy" types. In order to effectively debate these numbskulls, you need to know what makes them tick. Reading NRO and the Corner is sorta like when J-Lo enters the killers head in "The Cell", except instead of being populated with nightmarishly beautiful sets, everyone is wearing dockers, drinking bud light and going to bed at 11pm. I was quite tickled today then to see a few parodies of NRO. Even if you haven't ever subjected yourself to the pleasures of the Corner, you'd still find these funny. First off Ted Barlow was leaked today's agenda for the NRO Cruise. Favorite agenda item: 11:00 (Deck 1): Moonlight buffet Moonlight toppling of butter statue of Saddam Hussein Fun stuff. Secondly, we have a brilliant parody of the Corner from Andrew Northrup, entitled "The Cornier". Names have been changed to protect the guily (and prevent a lawsuit from the notoriously thin-skinned right). [Listening to: Open My Eyes that I May See - Deadbeat - Wild Life Documentaries (4:41)]... Read More »

Right Wing Dime Store Psychiatry

Oliver Willis takes apart right-wing hack Rich Lowry in a deft move of bloggy judo. Like Oliver, I'm a little sick of these 2-bit psychological profiles. I often think that these are written because A. they've got to meet a word quota for the day and B. there's nothing like a little unhinged hate to drive up the traffic from crosslinking at freeper paradise. I must be a sadist to keep reading the uninformed bile that passes for commentary at National Review.... Read More »

Talking Points Memo finally has an RSS feed...

Looks like Josh Marshall has finally implemented an RSS feed for his site....and it's being powered by Movable Type. Excellent!... Read More »

The Word for the Day is "schadenfreude"

boy, i feel like a pig in slop this week! Limbaugh Steps Down at ESPN Rush Limbaugh in pill probe What's interesting about this drug story is Limbaugh's non-denial denial: "I am unaware of any investigation by any authorities involving me. No governmental representative has contacted me directly or indirectly. If my assistance is required in the future, I will, of course, cooperate fully." Outside Probe of Leaks Is Favored (Poll Findings Come As White House Softens Denials) Money quote from Rethuglican Senator Lugar: "He has that main responsibility to see this through and see it through quickly, and that would include, if I was president, sitting down with my vice president and asking what he knows about it," Schwarzenegger Acknowledges Behaving 'Badly' Towards Women... Read More »

Return of the King

Hey! Looks like my predictions are coming true. Back in January, I predicted that the Return of the King would start spawning big comparisons from the wacko right. Turns out my predictions are on-target.... Read More »

Speaking of Howard Dean

He's got a profile up on Friendster. Update: So does Dubya... Read More »

Howard Dean has 'em running scared

Yesterday I was watching a political roundtable on CNN. It featured Peter Beinart of the New Republic, Donna Brazille (Al Gore's campaign manager in 2000), National Review's Jonah Goldberg and some guy from the conservative rag The Weekly Standard. The question came up about Howard Dean and his fundraising prowess. Beinart and Brazille poo-poohed it, saying Dean was going to have to tilt back towards the center to avoid alienating the electorate. Goldberg and the other conservative hack started off by saying, if Howard Dean is the Democratic candidate in 2004, Bush is going to win 45 states, and that the Democrats would be smart to choose someone more moderate. What was interesting was that Goldberg then immediately conceded that Dean was actually quite the centrist, but had been absolutely wrong on the war. Then I read this on Drudge, where Dean is supposedly going to dump Terry McAuliffe after he wins New Hampshire, and quotes a senior Dean campaign advisor as the source. Maybe it's just me, but I don't see anyone in the Dean campaign going to Drudge to drop juicy quotes. Then we have this story about Karl Rove claiming to be delighted with the prospects of a Dean candidacy. Why all the attention on Howard Dean? I think the Bush Cartel is genuinely concerned about the prospects of a Candidate Dean. The man is blunt and would mop the floor with Bush in a debate. Try as they might to paint him as the "new McGovern", the man is a centrist and the biggest threat. By pooh-poohing him and saying yeah, he's exactly who we want to face in the 2004 election, Rove & Co are trying to play mind games with the Dems. It's my opinion that Howard Dean scares the bejeebus out of the Republicans. If he's such a weak candidate, why all the attention? Why the mind games?... Read More »

Fascism and fundamentalism

Fascism and fundamentalism " In the Christian world, the trend is much less pronounced but still present. It exists in the increasing identification of mainstream fundamentalism with its more radical components, particularly the anti-abortion and anti-gay rights extremists. It is latent in the openly theocratic approach to governance propounded by Christian Reconstructionists and neoconservative moralists like Antonin Scalia. And it has gained a popular voice in the violently eliminationist rhetoric increasingly aimed at liberals, particularly those opposed to President Bush's war policies, much of it inflamed by conservative propagandists on talk radio like Rush Limbaugh." Scary stuff. Read the whole thing, as they say. [via Orcinus]... Read More »

News? Or Propaganda?

"Bush Lands on Aircraft Carrier" is the headline of this Washington Post story. From the first paragraph: President Bush has landed on board a U.S. aircraft carrier in the Pacific, where he will mark the end of major military operations in a prime-time television address. Maybe it's just me, but I don't see what the big deal is. It's almost an Onion headline. The sad thing is, Drudge actually links to this story with the headline "Top Gun". This is textbook, Chinese-style propaganda. Mind-boggling.... Read More »

Prosposed Colorado law would outlaw firewalls, encrypting your email

I got this link from the BoingBoing blog, the originating story came from Freedom To Tinker. Essentially these proposed laws would outlaw encrypting your email, using a firewall or employing anonymizing proxies. I'm not kidding: the crucial part of the proposed Colorado legislation says: " To conceal or assist another to conceal from any communication services provider, or from any lawful authority, the existence or place of origin or destination of any communication that utilizes a communication device." Encrypting an SMTP exchange involves encrypting the entire message: the from, the to, the subject line, the body. This technically is concealing the origin (sender) of the email from the ISP (aka communication services provider). NAT's employed in firewalls (like the one built into my 3Com ISDN lan modem) also conceal the origin of originating workstations. It goes without saying that the whole purpose of an anonymizing service (like anonymizer.com) is to conceal the origin. I'm not quite sure what to make of this one -- part of me is SCREAMING it can't happen here, I don't understand this, this is ludicrous. Let's see now: applying the RFC2487 patch to Qmail will make me guilty of a felony ? Jesus -- did we just lose a war or something? I've gotten paid to apply this patch. I mention in staff meetings the benevolence of encryption, firewalls and security, and the cowboys nod without question! And now they are proposing to make it illegal? Has the whole world gone crazy?!?... Read More »

From the "I know it was just a movie" department of observations.

I was just thinking -- if the government couldn't keep Elliott's house -- you know -- Elliott from ET -- quarantined properly with all those big elaborate duct systems connected to the van and with the zipper windows and doors everywhere -- what makes people think that some plastic window covering and duct tape is going to prevent them from the effects of a nearby chemical attack? Admittedly, it was the 80s and we had 80s technology and all, but still what the heck good is this gonna do?... Read More »

Priceless...

found at Eschaton... Read More »

kinsley strikes again

Dubya's Dividend Delight By Michael Kinsley Bush, in a funny way, seems to be a man of ideas. He doesn't have a lot of them himself, but hand him one and he'll run with it, undeterred by opposition, or by subsequent evidence and logic. He has the unreflective person's immunity from irony, that great killer of intellectual passion.... Read More »

bhairava lays it down on republicans and race.

Read This "It's always heart warming when right wingers who normally deride situation ethics and moral relativism, and the like embrace them strongly on issues of civil rights" Wow! It's not that often that I'll feel the need to link to a comment on a blog, but this one slays.... Read More »

Just a prediction for political punditry at the end of 2003/beginning of 2004...

There will be bloggers or editorial journalists making the inevitable metaphorical allegory to Return of the King, comparing Aragorn to some political figure. Conservative opinion is most likely to be swayed towards these metaphors, and there may be "Rumsfeld is to Gandalf what Saruman is to Hussein" silliness. Man, you can see these things coming a mile off if you just look a bit. Remember, you heard it here first...... Read More »

Al Gore the next head of the DNC?

Ryan Lizza writes in the latest web-only dispatch to the New Republic that Al Gore should be the next head of the Democratic National Committee. He offers some very good reasons: Gore could be the anti-McAuliffe. One close Gore associate said a few weeks ago that the rigors of fundraising were a big obstacle to him getting in the race. The next DNC chairman won't have to worry about that. Gore is also hugely popular with the party's African-American base. Gore could help heal some of the racial tension at the Democratic headquarters that marked McAuliffe's appointment, and he could help energize black voters during the campaign. Maybe Gore isn't the most compelling television surrogate for the Democrats, but he's a famously good debater, and the party should have someone who can alternately play the role of partisan and statesman when it faces off against the reserved and high-minded RNC Chairmain Marc Racicot. Go, Al, go!... Read More »

Mike Espy the next Senator from Mississippi?

The rumour is, if Trent Lott doesn't survive the vote on January 6th, he has threatened to resign altogether, allowing Misssissippi governor Ronnie Musgrave to appoint a new senator (and presumably a Democratic one at that). Speculation has it that former Secretary of Agriculture (and African-American) Mike Espy would be his choice. Very interesting...... Read More »

Fred Barnes is a disingenuous hack.

While doing my daily web crawl of conservative opinion, I ran across a little nugget of bullshit courtesy of the Weekly Standard's Fred Barnes. Barnes writes in his column, Al Gore Exit Stage Left: "In any case, with the first 2004 contest in Iowa, where the Democratic rank and file are heavily isolationist, the pro-war side of the debate might have been snuffed out entirely." Note how Barnes uses the news of Gore's decision not to run in 2004 to mischaracterize those opposed to war with Iraq. He calls them "isolationists". Now the last time I checked, most of the Democratic rank and file were not against toppling the Taliban, or bombing Milosevic into submission. They do, however, seem to be against the unprecedented action of a "pre-emptive" strike by a Western democracy against a sovereign nation. To mischaracterize this principled opposition to war with Iraq as an "isolationist" stance is yet another example of how the right will say anything, no matter how inaccurate, to stain and misrepresent opposing ideas.... Read More »

So I was wrong.

It looks like Trent isn't stepping down just yet, but interestingly enough, Kissinger is.... Read More »

Trent Lott: The Descension

It looks like Trent Lott is about to go down hard. He won't be stepping down as a Senator, but he's about to step down as the Senate Majority Leader. As a progressive Democrat, I'm feeling some schadenfreude at Lott's predicament. The ole boy has long been in direct opposition to my views.... Read More »